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TOWN TEMPLE · EASTERN GUJARAT · DEVOTIONALThe devotional heartbeat of the gateway town — a cluster of Hindu shrines serving the taluka centre on the Chhota Udaipur borderland, where the everyday religious life of a mixed community plays out at the junction of tribal and mainstream Gujarat.
Bodeli’s temples are community Hindu shrines serving the mixed population of this taluka junction town — a point where the plains of Vadodara district meet the tribal interior of Chhota Udaipur, and where the religious life of the town reflects that meeting. The temples here are modest — Hanuman, Shiva, Ganesh and local deity shrines — functioning as daily devotional centres for the town’s traders, administrators, teachers and the Adivasi communities who come in for the weekly market.
The most active times are early morning and the evening aarti. For the visitor, Bodeli’s temples are not a destination but a context — they give a sense of the ordinary religious life of an eastern Gujarat town, the kind of daily devotion that continues regardless of markets, schools or administrative schedules.
The temples are best experienced early morning, when the town is quiet and the smell of incense and the sound of bells mark the day’s beginning. No entry fee; open daily; modest dress required.
Illustration — Bodeli temples, the devotional heart of a junction town.
Illustration — Bodeli temples, shrines established with the town.
Bodeli's shrines grew alongside the town itself, taking root as the settlement became a taluka centre on the plains-to-tribal borderland.
The temples have always served a blended congregation — traders, the Adivasi communities of the interior, and the administrators and teachers of a working town.
The devotional rhythm settled early into the steady pattern of dawn puja and evening aarti that still marks the day.
They remain living, active community temples — the daily devotional infrastructure of a small working town.
Community devotion at modest, living shrines.
Dawn puja and the sound of temple bells.
A glimpse of life on the tribal borderland.
The mixed congregation of Bodeli town.
Simple, unstaged everyday devotion.
The best, quietest time to visit.
Community devotion at the town's central Hanuman shrine.
The daily start — dawn puja and ringing temple bells.
The most atmospheric hour — the town is quiet and the day begins with incense and bells.
Join the community puja at the central temple as the town's devotional day starts.
See the temples in context — the working lanes and weekly market that surround them.
Pause for simple Gujarati food at a roadside dhaba once you have wandered the shrines.
Read the mixed community — plains traders alongside the Adivasi people of the interior.
Local celebrations punctuate the calendar; ask in town when the next one falls.
Illustration — Bodeli temples, modest shrines in a working town.
Bodeli’s temples are not architecturally significant but are socially essential — the daily devotional infrastructure of a small working town that serves as the gateway between the plains and the tribal interior.
The morning puja rhythm and the evening aarti bells mark the community’s daily life. Open daily; no entry fee; modest dress.
Community Hindu shrines — Hanuman, Shiva, Ganesh
Morning puja and evening aarti — daily rhythm
Mixed community: trader, Adivasi, administrator
Gateway-town temples on the tribal borderland
Cool and dry — ideal for pilgrimage. Comfortable from dawn through the evening aarti.
Lush and green, but paths may flood. Mornings are fresh between the showers.
Hot and dry — early morning is the only comfortable window for a visit.
⏰ October to February is ideal for spiritual visits in Chhota Udaipur.
Vadodara airport is the nearest, roughly 100 km away, with onward taxis and buses to Bodeli.
Bodeli and Chhota Udaipur both sit on the regional rail line, putting the town within easy reach by train.
NH-56 runs from Vadodara to Bodeli; state buses, shared jeeps and taxis all serve the route.
DAWN-FRIENDLY
Come at dawn — the town is still and the first light suits the modest shrines.
The Hanuman shrine, the morning puja, ringing bells and the market lanes around the temples.
Skip flash during aarti and ask before photographing people at worship.
A small kit and a fast standard lens are all you need for these intimate, low-light interiors.
Comfort home cooking — an unlimited plate of dal, sabzi, roti and sweets.
Forest produce and millet, the everyday cooking of the Rathwa community.
A tribal staple — hearty millet flatbread eaten across the borderland.
Expect simple, satisfying vegetarian fare — Gujarati thalis in town and tribal forest food in the villages around it.
Hanuman, Shiva, Ganesh and a number of local deity shrines, all serving the town's mixed community.
Dawn — the morning puja is the most atmospheric and peaceful time of day.
No. Entry to the temples is free for everyone.
Yes — modest dress is required, and footwear is removed before entering the shrines.
They are the centre of everyday community devotion in a town that bridges the plains and the tribal interior.
The weekly market and the nearby Pithora villages, where the Rathwa mural tradition lives on.
October to February, when the weather is cool and ideal for a spiritual visit.
About 30 to 45 minutes is enough for an unhurried look around the shrines.
By NH-56 road from Vadodara (about 80 km), or by rail to Bodeli or Chhota Udaipur.
Vadodara airport, roughly 100 km away, with onward taxis and buses.
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Flamingo breeding grounds deep in the Great Rann
Quiet, palm-lined beaches on the Arabian Sea
Shimmering salt flats where wild asses roam nearby
The wide river that cradles Galteshwar temple
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